Ominous Stock Market Warning Signs - Sell in May and Go Away
Stock-Markets / Seasonal Trends Apr 20, 2013 - 07:57 PM GMTBy: Sy_Harding
 As  the potential Sell in May and Go Away influence approaches, problems for the  stock market are stacking up from both the fundamental and technical sides.
As  the potential Sell in May and Go Away influence approaches, problems for the  stock market are stacking up from both the fundamental and technical sides.
On the fundamental side;
- New home sales fell 4.6% in February, the biggest decline in two years.
- Durable Goods Orders ex-aircraft orders fell 2.7% in February.
- The Conference Board’s Consumer Confidence Index unexpectedly plunged from 68.0 in February to 59.7 in March.
- The Thomson Reuters/University of Michigan Consumer Sentiment Index plunged to a nine-month low in April.
- The ISM Mfg Index unexpectedly dropped from 54.2 in February to 51.3 in March, its third straight monthly decline. The ISM Non-Mfg Index, covering the services sector, also declined in March.
- Retail Sales fell 0.4% in March, the biggest decline in 9 months.
- Only 88,000 new jobs were created in March, much worse than the forecast for 200,000 jobs.
This  week we learned that the Conference Board’s Leading Economic Indicators fell  0.1% in March versus the consensus forecast for an increase of 0.2%.
  And  while overall housing starts were up in March, single-family home starts fell 5.0%,  and permits for futures starts fell 3.9%. 
  Meanwhile,  the economic problems are being confirmed by commodity prices, including the  price of oil. Declining commodity prices usually indicate demand for goods is  dropping and the economy is in trouble. 

For  instance, the CRB Index of Commodity Prices fell 15% in the summer of 2010 and  the S&P 500 fell 15% in that summer’s correction. In 2011, the CRB Index  fell 15% and the S&P declined 19.5% in that summer correction. Last year  the CRB Index fell again, and the S&P 500 fell 11% in its correction to the  early June low.
  So  it’s not comforting that even as the Dow and S&P 500 have been making new  highs this spring, the CRB Index is already down 11.5% from its last peak and  making lower highs on its rally attempts and lower lows on the pullbacks, no  bottom in sight yet.
  On  the technical side there is a negative divergence shaping up between the Dow  and the DJ Transportation Average, and between the blue chips of the S&P  500 and the small stock Russell 2000 Index. The Dow and S&P 500 remain near  recent highs and comfortably above their 50-day moving averages, while the  Transportation Index and Russell 2000 Index have both come down from their  March highs and broken beneath the previous support at their 50-day moving  averages.
  Meanwhile  global markets tend to move pretty much in tandem with each other, and an even  more ominous divergence has been in place for a while between the resilient U.S.  market and numerous important global markets, on which technical indicators  triggered sell signals a month or more ago. They include Brazil, China, Hong  Kong, India and Russia, which are already down an average of 12% from their  recent peaks.
  Even  the largest and strongest stock market of Europe, Germany, which had been  making new highs right along with the Dow, has been in a correction over the  last few weeks, now down 7%, with short-term support levels broken and looking  like more downside ahead.
  As  the old saying goes, the market does like to climb a wall of worry.
  But  with the economy stumbling again as it has in each of the last three summers,  commodity prices tumbling, and important global markets giving up, it’s no time  to be made complacent about the U.S. market by its continuing resilience, which  seems to now be on shaky underpinnings.
In  fact, investors should be preparing for the potential that downside positioning  may become the way to go before long. 
Sy Harding is president of Asset Management Research Corp., and editor of the free market blog Street Smart Post.
© 2013 Copyright Sy Harding- All Rights Reserved
Disclaimer: The above is a matter of opinion provided for general information purposes only and is not intended as investment advice. Information and analysis above are derived from sources and utilising methods believed to be reliable, but we cannot accept responsibility for any losses you may incur as a result of this analysis. Individuals should consult with their personal financial advisors.
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